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Leaked documents from the Iranian regime reveal a coordinated plan by its security apparatus, approved by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to violently suppress nationwide protests using force, surveillance and internet shutdowns.

Excerpts of the documents, reviewed by Fox News Digital, show that Iran’s Supreme National Security Council developed the strategy after the 2019 nationwide protests that came amid fuel price hikes and economic collapse.

At a National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) press briefing Tuesday covering the regime’s pre-planned orders behind the protests and mass killings, Alireza Jafarzadeh, deputy director of the Washington office, said the documents ‘were obtained from within the regime’ and later cited The People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (MEK) as having gained access to them.

‘This Directive by the National Security Council was obtained by the network in Iran of the MEK, which has access to sources within the regime,’ he confirmed to Fox News Digital.

‘These documents show the regime’s efforts to prevent the resurgence of the uprising and, if it occurred, to suppress it,’ Jafarzadeh added before stating that there are ‘clear operational plans allocated to the IRGC to use lethal force to kill as many people as needed to stay in power.’

The first document, classified ‘top secret,’ was issued Mar. 3, 2021, with the regime codifying four escalating law enforcement and security conditions. The regime defined how unrest would be handled and which authorities would be in command at each stage.

Initial law enforcement and non-armed security situations placed command authority with Iran’s national police force, with support from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and the Intelligence Ministry (VAJA).

In the most severe category, designated an ‘armed security situation,’ full command authority rapidly shifted to the IRGC.

‘For now, this compilation should be communicated for two years,’ Khamenei wrote before ordering the blueprint implemented nationwide.

The secret guidelines became the blueprint for crushing the January 2026 protests, which erupted amid soaring inflation, currency collapse and anger toward clerical rule.

According to the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), at least 6,854 people have been killed during the protests, with 11,280 cases under investigation.

Internal regime assessments cited in other leaked files describe three phases of the 2026 uprising: an initial law enforcement phase, followed by a non-armed security phase and finally an armed security situation beginning Jan. 8 when authority shifted fully to the IRGC that played the command role and carried out armed killings.

The documents specify that during armed security situations, the IRGC operated with support from other security bodies, while Iran’s Ministry of Communications was ordered to impose internet restrictions, including full shutdowns.

A second classified document, compiled in 2024 by the IRGC’s Sarallah Headquarters, reveals how far the regime went to prepare for dissent.

The 129-page ‘Comprehensive Security Plan of Tehran’ details extensive surveillance and repression measures, identifying members of the opposition MEK and family members of executed dissidents as ‘level number one’ enemies subject to monitoring and control.

‘It also shows how far the regime is prepared to go to kill as many people as needed, which they did in January 2026. However, these killings further convinced the people that there is only one way to end the killings, and that is to overthrow the regime,’ Jafarzadeh added.

‘There are more people, especially young ones, who have joined the ranks of the organized force to confront the IRGC and liberate the nation,’ he said.

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A House Foreign Affairs Middle East and North Africa Subcommittee hearing on Tuesday underscored what lawmakers and witnesses repeatedly described as a ‘historic’ but ‘narrowing’ opportunity to weaken Hezbollah and restore Lebanese state sovereignty, while exposing sharp disagreement over whether current U.S. policy is moving fast or forcefully enough.

Opening the hearing, Chairman Mike Lawler, R-NY., said Lebanon is ‘at a crossroads’ following the Nov. 2024 Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire, arguing the moment offers ‘an unprecedented opportunity’ to help Lebanon ‘break free of the shackles of Iran’s malign influence.’ He warned, however, that progress has been uneven, saying implementation of the Lebanese Armed Forces’ has been ‘haphazard at best.’

The ranking member, Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., struck a more confrontational tone toward the administration, warning that Hezbollah is already rebuilding and that U.S. policy risks squandering the moment.

‘There is a historic opportunity in Lebanon to disarm Hezbollah and remove its grip on the Lebanese state,’ he said. ‘That window of opportunity, however, is narrow. Hezbollah is working hard to rebuild, rearm and to reconstitute itself.’

He criticized cuts to non-security assistance and faulted comments by a Trump administration envoy who described Hezbollah as ‘a political party that also has a militant aspect to it,’ arguing such language ‘sent the wrong signals’ at a critical moment.

David Schenker, senior fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, testified that while Hezbollah has been weakened militarily, the pace of disarmament remains slow and obstructed.

‘The LAF has a presence in the south that it didn’t have prior to November 2024,’ Schenker said. ‘But they are not in control. Hezbollah still controls the region.’

Schenker said the obstacle is no longer capability but political will. ‘At this point, the question of disarmament is not a matter of capability but of will,’ he told lawmakers, warning that Hezbollah continues to thrive amid corruption and a cash-based economy.

Hanin Ghaddar, senior fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said that even full weapons surrender would not dismantle Hezbollah’s power.

‘Hezbollah is not sustained by weapons alone,’ Ghaddar said. ‘It survives through an economic and political ecosystem that protects cash flows, penetrates state institutions and enables military rebuilding.’

She warned that Lebanon’s unregulated cash economy has become Hezbollah’s most durable asset. ‘Weapons can be collected, but money keeps flowing,’ Ghaddar said. ‘Disarmament without dismantling the cash economy… will not be durable.’

All three witnesses emphasized U.S. support should be tied to measurable performance such as progress on disarmament of Hezbollah and economic reform.

Schenker called for renewed sanctions against corrupt Lebanese officials, saying, ‘We should be sanctioning leaders right now… who are obstructing reform.’

Dana Stroul, director of research and senior fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, warned that Washington’s approach remains incomplete.

‘For the past year, U.S. policy has focused on Hezbollah disarmament, which is critical, but on its own is only a partial strategy,’ Stroul said.

She cautioned that upcoming parliamentary elections could either ‘strengthen or undermine the anti-Hezbollah government,’ calling it the ‘worst-case outcome’ if Hezbollah-aligned politicians retain power.

Ghaddar said Hezbollah’s weakening has shifted Lebanese public discourse. ‘The mythology of resistance has shattered,’ she said. ‘Peace is no longer taboo.’

She argued that normalization with Israel would raise the political cost of Hezbollah’s rearmament and help lock in reform. ‘Without a credible peace horizon, disarmament and economic reform will be temporary. With one, they become structural,’ Ghaddar said.

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  • Veteran receiver Stefon Diggs is preparing for his first Super Bowl appearance with the New England Patriots.
  • Diggs has found new life in New England after contentious exits from Minnesota and Buffalo, and a short stint in Houston.
  • The receiver faces strangulation and assault charges from an alleged December incident, which he has denied.
  • Diggs has become the top target for second-year quarterback Drake Maye, helping rejuvenate the Patriots’ offense.

SAN JOSE, CA — Two trades, four different teams, playoff flameouts, emotional exits and a torn ACL last season. Stefon Diggs has endured the ebbs and flows of an NFL veteran.

Yet, he’s been rejuvenated in New England.

‘The amount of work that I put in brought me confidence. I’m not scared of nothing. I’m ready for everything that you know God throws at me. I just feel like I got big shoulders and I worked hard for it. So, what I learned about myself is I’m resilient,’ Diggs said Feb. 2, in the Patriots’ first Super Bowl 60 media appearance. ‘Having a passion for it is different when you fall short a million times. How many times can you get back up? And I got back up every time. I brush myself off. I made sure I was okay. I never gave up. I never gave up on myself, either. Even when those gave up around me.’

Since signing a three-year deal with the Patriots in March, Diggs has become New England’s leading receiver. Simultaneously, the Patriots have taken the 11-year veteran further than he’s ever gone before as he prepares for his first career Super Bowl.    

The mercurial receiver’s time in New England hasn’t come without controversy. He faces strangulation and assault charges from an alleged incident involving his personal chef in December. He categorically denied the allegations, the Patriots said in a statement. Diggs’ arraignment on the charges was originally scheduled for Jan. 23 in Dedham District Court, but the court date was later postponed to Feb. 13.

The charges came as an extension of the baggage the 11th-year NFL veteran brought to Foxborough. Diggs’ lone injury-shortened season with the Houston Texans followed a falling out of sorts between Diggs and the Buffalo Bills, who traded him to Houston in 2024 for a second-round pick in last year’s draft. It was only after a falling out in Minnesota that the Vikings traded Diggs to the Bills in 2020.

After securing a career-first Super Bowl berth with the Patriots’ 10-7 AFC Championship victory over the Denver Broncos, a teary-eyed Diggs said he was grateful that the Patriots ‘took a chance on me’ in signing him as he returned from injury.

Stefon Diggs-Drake May pairing helped rejuvenate Patriots offense

Diggs was part of a massive overhaul for the Patriots this past offseason. The Patriots spent more than $200 million in guaranteed money on free agents in 2025, the most by any team in the NFL last offseason. The new faces in New England and first-year coach Mike Vrabel have helped the Patriots become the fifth team to appear in the Super Bowl the year after winning fewer than five games.

This year’s edition of the Patriots features a unique blend of veterans and young players.

On offense, though, it’s Diggs who’s become Drake Maye’s No. 1 wide receiver in what’s been an MVP-caliber campaign for the second-year quarterback. It’s a small sample size, but Diggs is the best wideout Maye’s had in New England. Diggs is Maye’s first 1,000-yard receiver and only player to register over 70 receptions.

Maye and Diggs produced the highest completion percentage (83.3%) among quarterback and wide receiver duos in 2025, according to Next Gen Stats.

‘I think it’s been an incredibly positive growing experience for Drake to be around a player as accomplished as Stef. And Stef has done many, many, many things in this league. He came in with a lot of pelts on the wall. Drake has learned how to assimilate with him, work together with a player that has been around a long time and been around a lot of good quarterbacks,’ Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels said. ‘I think it’s been really great for Drake’s growth and development in general.’

Maye said Diggs has even helped build up his confidence.  

‘He’s big on trust and trust in him. He’s always instilling trust into me and confidence in myself. He’s always pumping me up. His trust and confidence in himself never wavers,’ Maye said. ‘To see somebody at his level who has done it at a high level in this league a long time. To see that and knowing that his confidence never waivers, why should mine?’

Diggs had a frustrating end in Minnesota, followed by an unceremonious exit in Buffalo and a cup of coffee in Houston.

Is Diggs’ fourth team the charm? Super Bowl 60 could provide a more definitive answer.

“It’s been a long time I’ve been playing. I’ve been in the NFL for 11 years,” Diggs said. “I’m here on a business trip. It’s a good experience but I’m here on a mission.”

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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Add another star to the NBA trading block.

Reports emerged Monday, Feb. 2, indicating that Los Angeles Clippers guard James Harden, an 11-time All-Star and the 2017-18 Most Valuable Player, has become a potential trade candidate.

Harden is averaging 25.4 points, 8.1 assists and 4.8 rebounds per game in his 17th season in the NBA. Yet, even though the Clippers have drastically improved their play recently, they entered this season with the oldest roster in NBA history, so an eventual youth movement makes sense.

There is one team, however, that has clearly emerged as a likely destination.

Here are potential landing spots in a trade for James Harden:

Cleveland Cavaliers

This is the destination that has the most momentum. Both Sports Illustrated and Yahoo Sports identified Cleveland as being in serious talks with the Clippers over Harden. The fit is actually pretty smooth.

The Cavaliers have been waiting for Darius Garland, who also plays point guard, to return to full health. Garland is 10 years younger, so the Cavaliers might be wanting Los Angeles to attach some form of draft capital — be it a first-round selection or a future pick swap — to finalize the deal.

The salaries are practically identical, which matters most for Cleveland as a second-apron team. And it makes sense for Los Angeles, which entered the season with the oldest roster in NBA history. The Cavs appear to be the clear frontrunner here.

Minnesota Timberwolves

This is a team that has been in the market for a point guard for some time. Harden would instantly provide experience and playmaking — not to mention a scoring threat — at the position.

The Timberwolves have made consecutive conference finals appearances, but have come up short each time. Minnesota almost certainly is looking to bolster its roster and give star guard Anthony Edwards a little more firepower. Depending on the price it would take to swing a deal, Harden would represent a solid, win-now move.

Houston Rockets

Ever since veteran point guard Fred Van Vleet went down before the season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament, the Rockets have experimented with various solutions at point guard. None has been a long-term fix.

Harden, who played in Houston for a little more than eight seasons, would instantly bring a steady, playmaking presence on a Rockets team that is built to contend right now for a championship.

Atlanta Hawks

They have plenty of draft capital and do have a void left by Trae Young, whom the Hawks traded last month to the Wizards. Yet, Atlanta may not be the most seamless fit, given that the Hawks still appear a ways from contention and given that general manager Onsi Saleh has been calculated in stashing draft capital. The Hawks most likely favor financial flexibility over a pricey veteran.

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If you thought former NFL quarterback Tom Brady, who won six Super Bowls with the New England Patriots, would root for his former team in Super Bowl 60, you’d be wrong.

But Brady also isn’t rooting against his former team by pulling for the Seattle Seahawks.

‘I don’t have a dog in the fight in this one,’ the Fox Sports NFL analyst said in the latest episode of his ‘Let’s Go!’ podcast. ‘May the best team win.’

Brady went on to compliment the work that Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel has done in New England, righting the ship and helping lead the team to another Super Bowl appearance after a couple of 4-13 seasons. As far as rooting interests go, the seven-time Super Bowl champion is just rooting for a good game.

‘I wanna see good plays, good throws, good strategy, good decisions,’ Brady said.

The reality may be that Brady actually has two dogs in Super Bowl 60’s two-dog fight.

The Patriots are one dog. The former NFL quarterback spent 20 years of his career in New England, winning six Super Bowls, four Super Bowl MVP awards and three NFL MVP awards during his time there. The Patriots memorialized Brady’s legacy with the team in the form of a statue of their former quarterback, standing 17 feet tall in front of Gillette Stadium.

The other dog is Klint Kubiak, the Seahawks’ offensive coordinator. On Sunday, Feb. 1, multiple reports indicated that the Las Vegas Raiders, a team in which Brady holds a minority ownership stake, were closing on on hiring Kubiak as their next head coach. The hiring cannot become official until after the Seahawks’ season is over – after Super Bowl 60 – but both sides anticipate they’ll close the deal shortly thereafter.

Time will tell which of Brady’s two dogs will come out on top – and whether they’ll put on the show he’s hoping for.

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The Memphis Grizzlies continued to dismantle their once-promising roster with another major move involving the team’s core. But it doesn’t involve the star the NBA thought might be traded this week.

The Utah Jazz have acquired Jaren Jackson Jr. as part of a significant trade in which the Memphis Grizzlies will receive three future first-round draft picks and several players, according to a report from ESPN on Tuesday, Feb. 3. The deal comes two days before the NBA’s trade deadline and represents a significant swerve after weeks of rumors surrounding Ja Morant’s future with the Grizzlies.

The trade, once finalized, would send Jackson, center Jock Landale and forward Vince Williams, Jr. to the Jazz, according to multiple reports. Utah rookie Walter Clayton Jr., Kyle Anderson, Taylor Hendricks, Georges Niang and three future first-round draft picks are going back to the Grizzlies in the transaction.

Jackson joins a rebuilding Utah roster that features Lauri Markannen, promising second-year guard Keyonte George, center Walker Kessler and top-five 2025 NBA draft pick Ace Bailey. Memphis, meanwhile, adds to the haul of first-round draft picks it acquired by trading Desmond Bane to the Orlando Magic this past offseason. The Grizzlies indicated last month they were also fielding offers for Morant for the first time.

Jackson, 26, was the longest-tenured member of the franchise after being selected with the No. 4 overall pick in the 2018 NBA draft. The 2023 NBA defensive player of the year is averaging 19.2 points and 5.8 rebounds per game this season.

Jaren Jackson Jr. trade details

Here are the official trade details between the Grizzlies and Jazz, including draft picks, according to multiple reports:

  • Utah Jazz receive: Jaren Jackson Jr., John Konchar, Jock Landale and Vince Williams Jr.
  • Memphis Grizzlies receive: Walter Clayton Jr., Kyle Anderson, Taylor Hendricks, Georges Niang, 2027 first-round pick (most favorable of Cleveland/Minnesota/Utah), 2027 first-round pick (Lakers), and a 2031 first-round pick (Phoenix).

Jaren Jackson Jr. trade reaction

Here’s a sampling of details that have emerged on social media since the reported trade between the Grizzlies and Jazz featuring Jaren Jackson Jr. went public:

Jaren Jackson Jr. contract

Jackson, 26, is under contract through the 2029-30 season after signing a 5-year, $240-million extension this past offseason. He has a cap hit of $35 million this season that then increases to $49 million during the 2026-27 season. There is a player option for the 2029-30 season.

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President Donald Trump has signed legislation ending the partial government shutdown that started Friday at midnight. 

The legislation Trump signed funds agencies including the Department of War, the Department of State, the Treasury Department and others through the end of September and the end of the fiscal year. 

However, it only funds the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) through Feb. 13, meaning Republicans and Democrats will be forced to work together to secure a longer-term funding plan for the agency. 

While the House had previously passed funding bills to keep the government open through the end of September, Democrats failed to get on board with the measures in response to Trump’s ramped-up immigration efforts in Minneapolis. 

DHS announced Operation Metro Surge in December 2025 to dispatch thousands of Immigration and Customs Control agents into the city. 

As a result, Senate Democrats refused to get behind the deal due to its funding for DHS after two Customs and Border Patrol agents shot and killed Alex Pretti, a Department of Veterans Affairs ICU nurse, while he was recording federal immigration enforcement operations in Minneapolis in January. 

Ultimately, the Senate passed the compromise spending measure Friday that would fund key agencies, but the House was out of session and couldn’t pass its version of the measure in time to prevent a partial government shutdown. The House ultimately passed the compromise deal Tuesday by a 217–214 margin.

The most recent shutdown comes on the heels of the longest government shutdown in U.S. history in fall 2025, where the government remained shuttered for more than 40 days in October and November 2025. 

On Nov. 12, 2025, Trump signed legislation that would continue to fund the government at the same levels during fiscal year 2025 through Jan. 30 to provide additional time to finalize a longer appropriations measure for fiscal year 2026.

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Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer stood in the way of the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act (SAVE) this week, claiming that it represents ‘Jim Crow’ segregation laws, leading many on social media to bring up his identical claim about a Georgia voting law that resulted in record Black turnout.

Schumer pushed back on a Republican plan to add the SAVE Act, which would require states to obtain proof of citizenship in-person when people register to vote and remove non-citizens from voter rolls, to the spending package being debated in Congress.

‘I have said it before and I’ll say it again, the SAVE Act would impose Jim Crow-type laws to the entire country and is dead on arrival in the Senate,’ Schumer said on Monday. ‘It is a poison pill that will kill any legislation that it is attached to… The SAVE Act is reminiscent of Jim Crow era laws and would expand them to the whole of America. Republicans want to restore Jim Crow and apply it from one end of this country to the other. It will not happen.’

Many on social media quickly pointed to Schumer previously calling a Georgia election integrity law ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ before the law resulted in record Black turnout in the 2022 state election.

‘Schumer used the same line to describe Georgia laws that indisputably expanded voter access back in 2022,’ commentator and writer AG Hamilton posted on X. ‘It’s incredibly offensive and unserious to pretend that every voting law equates to a renewal of Jim Crow.’

Many Democrats, from Schumer, to President Joe Biden, to failed Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, warned that the Georgia voter integrity law would be ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ and Major League Baseball even pulled its All-Star Game from Atlanta in 2021 amid public pressure.

Ultimately, the Georgia Secretary of State revealed that the law did not suppress turnout, but rather increased it, particularly among minority voters.

‘Chuck Schumer sounds like a broken record,’ Honest Elections Project Executive Director Jason Snead told Fox News Digital. ‘When Georgia passed a new voting law in 2021, Schumer labeled it ‘Jim Crow’ even though the state went on to see explosive turnout in 2022.’

Snead pointed to a University of Georgia poll after the 2022 election finding that 0% of Black respondents had a poor experience voting. 

Snead continued, ‘Now, Schumer is smearing the SAVE Act the same way because he has no legitimate excuse for opposing a law that makes sure only American citizens are voting—which more than 80% of Americans support. Schumer’s smears were false then, and they are false now.

‘Schumer and the Democrats keep trying to rig the rules of our elections by pushing failed, California-style election laws that invite chaos and fraud. That’s not what Americans want.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Schumer’s office for comment.

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A Senate Republican suggested Wednesday that House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., had his feelings hurt by not being included in the Trump-Schumer deal to fund the government. 

The House passed the five-bill funding package, along with a two-week funding extension for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), on Tuesday. Jeffries and most House Democrats, save for 21, voted against it as the partial government shutdown entered its fourth day. 

Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., said it was because Jeffries was ‘butt hurt’ that he was not looped into the deal brokered between Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and President Donald Trump. 

‘He’s butt hurt that President Trump didn’t call him, too,’ Marshall told Fox News Digital. ‘But I think that’s on Schumer.’

Marshall described the scene in the Oval Office last week, where top-ranking Senate Republicans met with Trump as the funding deadline neared, and Senate Democrats were digging in deeper into their demands to renegotiate the DHS funding bill. 

‘The president says, ‘Get Schumer on the phone.’ They get Schumer on the phone. They broker a deal,’ Marshall said.

‘So really, it’s on Schumer that he agreed to this deal, really, before bringing Hakeem in,’ he continued. ‘And really it comes down to that Hakeem’s feelings are butt hurt, and to him, he’s fighting for his political life and really struggling.’

While the deal does fund 11 out of the 12 agencies under Congress’ purview, DHS remains an open question.

Senate Democrats, following the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti during an immigration operation in Minneapolis, demanded that the bipartisan bill to fund the agency be sidelined in order to cram in more restrictions and reforms for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). 

Turning to a two-week continuing resolution (CR) to further negotiate the bill has Republicans concerned that they will end up in the same position within the next few days, given the truncated timeframe to hash out major issues with one of the most politically perilous funding bills.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said that negotiations with Senate Democrats would be carried out by Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., who chairs the Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee. 

He acknowledged, however, that Trump would be the deciding factor. 

‘Ultimately, that’s going to be a conversation between the President of the United States and the Democrats here in the Senate,’ he said.

But Schumer insisted that Thune needed to be in on the negotiations. 

‘If Leader Thune negotiates in good faith, we can get it done,’ Schumer said. ‘We expect to present to the Republicans a very serious, detailed proposal very shortly.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Schumer and Jeffries for comment.

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: A group led by conservative moms is stepping into the fight against illegal Chinese-made vapes, inspired by the Trump administration’s efforts, and announcing it will be mounting an ‘aggressive’ 2026 campaign to educate parents on the dangers of illegal e-cigarettes. 

Moms for America Action, the nation’s largest conservative mothers organization, announced in a press release it will make combating illegal Chinese vapes a top priority in the 2026 election cycle, mobilizing parents and placing ads nationwide to demand tougher enforcement and accountability for manufacturers flooding the U.S. market with illicit products.

The group says the action is in line with the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal vape products manufactured in China that are marketed to children with a variety of flavors.

‘For moms, this is personal,’ Emily Stack, executive director of Moms for America Action, said in the press release.

‘Illegal Chinese vapes are showing up in our schools, our neighborhoods, and our homes every single day. Moms are fed up, and we’re taking action to stop these products from targeting our kids.’

Moms for America Actions says it will ‘mobilize moms’ to ‘advocate for stronger enforcement, accountability for foreign manufacturers, and protections for children and families.’

In the press release, the group points out that many illicit Chinese vapes are ‘deliberately designed’ to appeal to children and says that will be a main focus of their campaign’s pushback.

 ‘This is not an accident; it’s by design,’ Stack explained. ‘China has built a billion-dollar industry on addicting American kids to illegal products that have no place in our communities. Moms are fed up, and we fully support the Trump administration’s aggressive actions to shut down this black market.’

The group’s efforts are in line with the Trump administration’s push to combat illicit Chinese vapes, highlighted by an $86.5 million seizure of illegal vapes in Chicago last year that accompanied ‘Operation Vape Trail,’ an operation by Trump’s Drug Enforcement Agency to stem illegal vape sales. 

‘The Chinese are getting richer while our children get sicker,’ Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. posted on X last September. ‘We’re putting an end to that.’

‘We are targeting illegal Chinese vapes, and we will stop them from poisoning our children.’

China’s vape industry is estimated at $28 billion, and despite federal restrictions, government data indicates that two-thirds of its products reach U.S. consumers. More than 80% of vapes sold nationwide are illicit and not authorized for sale. 

‘President Trump’s actions send a clear message: profiting off the addiction of our children will not be tolerated,’ Stack said. ‘Moms want safe communities, honest enforcement of the law, and leaders who put American families first. We are committed to making sure these dangerous products are removed from our schools and neighborhoods for good.’

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